Two Poets of the Oxford Movement: John Keble and John Henry Newman

Přední strana obálky
Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1996 - Počet stran: 296
This book examines the poetry of two important figures in the Oxford Movement, a campaign that began by asserting the independence of the English Church from secular power and that went on to Catholicize the Protestant color of Anglicanism in the early nineteenth century. John Keble and John Henry Newman both conceived poetry as the instrument of religious persuasion: Keble through his Christian Year which, although it antedated the movement, was hailed as its Baptist cry; and Newman through his more aggressive contributions to Lyra Apostolica. After a brief introduction in which he discusses the nature of Tractarian poetry - members of the movement were given that nickname - author Rodney Stenning Edgecombe presents detailed readings of the two collections, stressing their value as poetry rather than as theological documents. He argues that both men possessed real lyric gifts which shifts in taste and the theological emphasis of earlier commentaries have tended to obscure.

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Obsah

Preface and Acknowledgments9
9
I
35
II
110
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Odkazy na tuto knihu

John Keble in Context
Kirstie Blair
Omezený náhled - 2004
John Keble in Context
Kirstie Blair
Náhled není k dispozici. - 2004

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